Articles

Holiday spending has bounced back from levels that plummeted after the Great Recession in 2007, but consumer surveys indicate people aren’t spending as much as last year, or as much as in pre-recession years.

Michigan has seen the number of people without health insurance cut in half in the five years of the Affordable Care Act, commonly called Obamacare, and millions nationwide face the loss of health coverage if President-elect Donald J.

Slightly more than 3 years ago, Mohamad Tanbal decided it was time to take his family and get out of Syria, then two years into internal fighting that continues today and has displaced millions of Syrians.

“Don’t Juggle Your Attention.” That’s the message motorists in Michigan will be seeing through 16 million billboard impressions during the National Distracted Driving Awareness Month taking place in April.

Wikileaks, the controversial international nonprofit that publishes secret and classified information, has created a tool that allows people to search the emails from the private account of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton when she was U.

Dr. Shakil Khan, president of the Multicultural Council of America in Clinton Township, is a Certified Navigator, helping to shepherd the uninsured to health coverage under the Affordable Care Act, more commonly called Obamacare.

Low-income residents, including an estimated several hundred thousand in Michigan, can continue to receive federal tax subsidies to pay for health coverage under the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare.

A declining rate of fatalities nationally and in Michigan is poor consolation to the families and friends of those who die in traffic crashes – a point driven home by the fatal crash in Macomb County last week that killed three teens and left two other severely injured in an accident at Stony Creek Metropark.

Chronically long waits that sick veterans were enduring at Veterans Affairs hospitals and clinics prompted federal lawmakers last year to provide an additional $16.3 billion to hire more doctors, open more clinics and expand a program that lets veterans receive private-sector care.

Elected officials, law enforcement officers and others proclaim there’s a heroin “epidemic” sweeping the country, and that it’s taking hold in rural and suburban communities once considered unlikely places to find illicit drugs.